"Our Walker and Nomad chip and PIN devices are shipping globally, and we expect significant interest from the burgeoning U.S. market in our patented and secure solutions," stated Mitchell Cobrin, founder and Chief Executive Officer of AnywhereCommerce. He attributed the demand to card brand mandates for U.S. adoption of the EMV standard by October 2015.

"Walker is a simple and elegant mobile Point-of-Sale (mPOS) solution that enables merchants, acquirers, ISOs and issuers to quickly and cost-effectively add EMV-certified chip-based payment technology to their expanding m-commerce offerings here in the U.S. - without having to abandon still-dominant magnetic stripe capability," Cobrin said.

Weighing in at 1.41 ounces, Walker is built to withstand a minimum 300,000 cycles, whether it is used for line-busting or accepting payments at remote locations, the company stated. It also comes equipped with a three-track mag stripe card reader, an internal rechargeable Lithium ion battery, and a plug-and-play application programming interface or optional software for integration with existing processor infrastructures.

"Technology providers that have strategies to support all major presentation methods like NFC, chip and signature, and chip and PIN, can service the immediate and long-term needs of financial providers and merchants that are looking to meet EMV standards," noted Rick Oglesby, Senior Analyst for the Aite Group LLC in a press release.

David Kaminsky, Senior Analyst with Mercator Advisory Group, added that the U.S. transition to EMV technology could take several years to fully implement. "A flexible product such as Walker, which enables EMV payment acceptance while still supporting magnetic stripe capability, offers merchants and other parties a safe and familiar way to wade into the coming EMV wave," he said.